Johanna Fiedler is the daughter of Arthur Fiedler, the long-time conductor of the Boston Pops, and has worked in the field of classical music for many years. She is the author of Arthur Fiedler: Papa, the Pops, and Me. She lives in New York City.
“Weav[es] telling vignettes and interseting interpretations into a
rich tapestry that vividly describes what goes on behind the great
gold curtain. [Fiedler] deserves an ovation.” --The Dallas Morning
News
“Elegant. . . . It’s the opera book that tells you what you really
want to know, not by gossiping, but by sensitive discussion of
facts long-hidden behing [the Met’s] Kremlin-like façade.” —The
Philadelphia Inquirer
“High-toned dish. . . . [The Met is] creepy one minute,
transcendentally beautiful the next, but never, ever boring.” --St.
Louis Post-Dispatch
“Compelling. . . .Lively, in-depth. . . . Fiedler doesn’t stint in
her tales about those temperamental artists who make the business
of running an opera company unlike any other.” --The Wall Street
Journal
“Provides a unique perspective not only on the opera scene, but on
the changing landscape of American society since the Met’s opening
in 1883. . . . It also serves up some pretty spicy dish.” —The
Boston Globe
“The juicy survival saga of a leaky vessel that has managed to stay
afloat despite constant threats of disaster and a passenger list
out of Ship of Fools.” —The New York Observer
“Evenhanded. . . . Brings an emotional immediacy to events.” --The
New York Times
“Opera buffs looking for a chatty, informative and basically fair
take on the Met will enjoy the book.” —The New York Times Book
Review
“There’s plenty of gossip. . . . Digs into power struggles, plus
diva dramas, even a murder.” --USA Today
“A great pleasure to read. Simultaneously thoughtful, well-written
and trashy . . . an ideal beach read for opera buffs.” —Time Out
New York
“Fiedler succeeds in exposing all the dirty linen that she used to
work so hard to conceal: the affairs, the squables, the nasty
memos.” --The New Yorker
“High-toned dish. . . . [The Met is] creepy one minute,
transcendentally beautiful the next, but never, ever boring.” --St.
Louis Post-Dispatch
“A rare, gossipy, behind-the-scenes look into the life of New
York’s Metropolitan Opera, where passions are as dramatic offstage
as on.” --Town and Country
“A facsinating survey of the misdeeds going on in the back. . . . A
must-read for all operaphiles.” --The State (Columbia, SC)
“Breezy. . . . Fiedler makes old scandal as intriguing as topical
news about its current Artistic Director James Levine and General
Manager Joseph Volpe.” –The Austin Chronicle
“A thorough-going, eyeball-rolling institutional history. . . . One
couldn’t ask for a more knowledgeable guide to the inner wrokings
of the Met.” --Kirkus Reviews
“Fiedler delivers the goods. . . . By the time I finished Molto
Agitato, I was ready for more.” --John Griffin, San Antonio
Express-News
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